IMDb RATING
6.1/10
927
YOUR RATING
Salome, pregnant by Chad, runs away from her rural Texas home and marries wealthy Yale student Tony. Years later she runs into Chad, who is now a successful musician in New York.Salome, pregnant by Chad, runs away from her rural Texas home and marries wealthy Yale student Tony. Years later she runs into Chad, who is now a successful musician in New York.Salome, pregnant by Chad, runs away from her rural Texas home and marries wealthy Yale student Tony. Years later she runs into Chad, who is now a successful musician in New York.
- Directors
- Writers
- Stars
Jay Adler
- Sammy Trist
- (uncredited)
Ricky Allen
- Saul
- (uncredited)
Harry Caesar
- Blues House Party Spectator
- (uncredited)
Charles Calvert
- Deacon
- (uncredited)
Carl Christian
- Minister
- (uncredited)
Ken Christy
- Conductor
- (uncredited)
George Cisar
- Cop
- (uncredited)
- Directors
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured reviews
The opening twenty, or so, minutes of this film are ludicrous, and I had to force myself to stay away from the delete button on my DVR. Pretty couple Wagner & Wood unconvincingly play two white-trash Texas teenagers, utilizing some of the worst faux Texas/Southern accents to ever grace (or in this case, disgrace) the screen. Granted, once the film has Pearl Bailey to work with, there are some nice moments, but they are few and far between.
Hamilton has little to do, and Susan Kohner plays spoiled rich girl Catherine so broadly, you expect the character to grow horns and carry around a pitchfork.
Sets and costumes are the usual MGM glam.
Hamilton has little to do, and Susan Kohner plays spoiled rich girl Catherine so broadly, you expect the character to grow horns and carry around a pitchfork.
Sets and costumes are the usual MGM glam.
the movie was one of my favorites because it shadowed my own life to a certain degree. it seemed so real to me it was scary. i love natalie wood and robert wagner and i felt for both of them in this film as though it was really happening. susan kohner was a very beautiful girl and i fell for her hook line and sinker
Anderson's movie is derivative.It looks like lite Douglas Sirk: the spoiled kid sister (played by Susan Kohner who worked with Sirk) is not unlike Marylee (Dorothy Malone) in "Written on the wind" ;besides ,Ruby's funeral will fatally make you think of that of Annie in "Imitation of life" ,a black choir singing "Free at last" replacing Mahalia Jackson.The screenwriters also borrow from Kazan's "splendor in the grass" as far as the two leads' fate is concerned.And the baby trick was used a hundred times or more in the thirties and forties melodramas (notably Bette Davis' "the big lie" and "the old maid" ;Olivia De Havilland' s "to each his own").
Having said this,one must credit Natalie Wood for making the best of the stereotyped part of a go-getter;Robert Wagner's moody looks work wonders too when he plays the trumpet and in the scene when he backs Pearl Bailey's impressive vocals.
This is the kind of movie they don't do anymore;this is the kind of story which could go on and on and on and on;in a word,it's the perfect soap opera ,and it still exists today in the form of the TV series.
Like this?try these.......
Peyton Place Mark Robson 1957
Imitation of life Douglas Sirk 1959
Having said this,one must credit Natalie Wood for making the best of the stereotyped part of a go-getter;Robert Wagner's moody looks work wonders too when he plays the trumpet and in the scene when he backs Pearl Bailey's impressive vocals.
This is the kind of movie they don't do anymore;this is the kind of story which could go on and on and on and on;in a word,it's the perfect soap opera ,and it still exists today in the form of the TV series.
Like this?try these.......
Peyton Place Mark Robson 1957
Imitation of life Douglas Sirk 1959
I happened to catch this movie on TNT one night and just admire this movie. It is more realistic where not all the things happen to please the viewer, but it takes you into the life of two young adults in love.They are confused and one of them runs away and the other follows to run away and the two make each other crazy, and involve two siblings into their life. The story just revolves around their relationship with others and each other. I also couldn't believe when Chad Bixby says to Salome (not a perfect quote) : If I can't have you, then I will destroy you!"
I happened to see this film years ago in a sleepless night, zapping through some of the less commercial public canals we still had at the time in Europe. It really opened my soul because of the music included. I will not comment on the quality of the script or the acting of the young couple Natalie Wood and Robert Wagner; others can do better than I. But I like the slow pace, the melodramatic story, the dialogue lines that stay in your head, and - above all - I was thrilled by the singing and acting of Pearl Bailey as Ruby Jones. If ever you have to explain the feelings that gave rise to the blues, ahead of the ubiquitous slavery hardships and working in the cotton fields, then this movie is a 'must-see'. When Chad is in the lowest of spirits and ends up in a morning-after hang-out, he runs into this Ruby Jones, an alcoholic, but warm-hearted black singer. And she treats him with a song, unaccompanied, raw voice, that expresses his feelings so well, and gives him the idea he is not the only unhappy, lost man on this globe. I don't know if Mrs Bailey sung the track herself or was dubbed, but she succeeds in getting the blues feeling across as I've never heard thereafter. Same when later on in the movie she sings to Chad, playing the trumpet: "What am I heading for? Blues is knocking at my door". Alas! this song is spoiled by a dubbed in band and even background vocals if I remember well - anyhow, it takes away from the simplicity of just a singer and a "horn player" (as she puts it throughout the picture). The sad story of the twists and impossibilities of human relationships is to me more real-life than most of the soapy Hollywood plots that come to us by shiploads these days. Endearing, that's probably the word that says it all.
Did you know
- TriviaThis film's title was the inspiration for the name of the 1980s British pop-rock band Fine Young Cannibals.
- Quotes
Chad Bixby: Do you think I'm a fool?
Ruby Jones: I think most men are fools, white boy. And most women.
- ConnectionsFeatured in Let's Get Lost (1988)
- How long is All the Fine Young Cannibals?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Language
- Also known as
- All the Fine Young Cannibals
- Filming locations
- Production company
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
Box office
- Budget
- $1,638,000 (estimated)
- Runtime
- 1h 52m(112 min)
- Aspect ratio
- 2.35 : 1
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